Information Quality

Information Quality Standards

To ensure and maximize quality information, authors, reviewers and/or disseminators are to focus on three underlying requirements for quality: utility, objectivity and integrity of information.

Utility

In assessing the usefulness of information disseminated to the public, consider the uses of the information from the perspective of the public. When transparency of information is relevant for assessing information's usefulness from the public's perspective, address transparency when developing and reviewing the information. (Transparent refers to the clear, obvious and precise nature of the information.)

Presentation
Disseminate information in an accurate, clear, complete and unbiased manner. This involves presenting information within a proper context. Where appropriate, data should have full, accurate and transparent documentation, and should identify and disclose error sources affecting data quality.

In some instances, when disseminating certain types of information to the public, other information must also be disseminated in order to ensure an accurate, clear, complete and unbiased presentation. When appropriate:

Identify the sources of the disseminated information (to the extent possible, consistent with confidentiality protections)

In a scientific, financial or statistical context, identify the supporting data and models so that the public can assess for itself whether there may be some reason to question the objectivity of the sources

Substance
Focus on ensuring accurate, reliable and unbiased information. In a scientific, financial or statistical context, generate the original and supporting data and develop the analytic results using sound statistical and research methods.

If data and analytic results have been subjected to formal, independent, external peer review, the information may generally be presumed to be of acceptable objectivity.

If agency-sponsored peer review is employed to help satisfy objectivity, the review process shall meet the general criteria for competent and credible peer review, namely:

Peer reviewers must be selected primarily on the basis of necessary technical expertise

Peer reviewers must be expected to disclose to agencies prior technical/policy positions they may have taken on the issues at hand

Peer reviewers must be expected to disclose to agencies their sources of personal and institutional funding (private or public sector) and

Peer reviews must be conducted in an open and rigorous manner

When disseminating influential scientific, financial, or statistical information, include a high degree of transparency about data and methods to facilitate the reproducibility of such information by qualified third parties. To this end:

Authors may identify, in consultation with the relevant scientific and technical communities, those types of data that can practicably be subjected to a reproducibility requirement, given ethical, feasibility or confidentiality constraints. Reproducibility of data is an indication of transparency about research design and methods and thus a replication exercise (i.e., a new experiment, test or sample) is not required prior to each dissemination.

Concerning analytic results, provide sufficient transparency about data and methods so that a qualified member of the public could undertake an independent reanalysis. These transparency standards apply to agency analysis of data from a single study as well as to analyses that combine information from multiple studies.

The guidelines do not override other compelling interests such as privacy, trade secrets, intellectual property and other confidentiality protections

In situations where public access to data and methods will not occur due to other compelling interests, apply especially rigorous robustness checks to analytic results and document what checks were undertaken

Disclose the specific data sources that have been used and the specific quantitative methods and assumptions that have been employed

Define the type of robustness checks, and the level of detail for documentation, appropriate for the nature and multiplicity of issues for which the agency is responsible

Influence

Within the Secret Service, influential data/information is that which has a genuinely clear and substantial impact at the national level and on major public and private policy decisions as they relate to federal law enforcement and the safeguarding of the payment and financial systems of the United States. The accuracy of this data is significant due to the critical nature of these decisions.

Integrity

Protect information from unauthorized access or revision, to prevent corruption or falsification of information. Comply with government, department and bureau security requirements, and OMB Circulars A-123, A-127, and A-130 when disseminating information.